CCJ, I have no problem taking your money if your up to it.

Moderators: LyricalRico, nate33, montestewart
Some random troll wrote:Not to sound negative, but this team is owned by an arrogant cheapskate, managed by a moron and coached by an idiot. Recipe for disaster.
rockymac52 wrote:CCJ, I gotta say, you're delusional on this one. It's one thing if you want to be down on the Wizards' chances this season. But it's a whole another story if you want to talk about the Bobcats having some success. Or them landing a big time free agent (bigger than Nene).
I'm a big Rich Cho fan, and I think eventually he'll find a way to make the Bobcats respectable again, but it's not happening this year.
On April 14, 2008, Sessions scored a then career-high 20 points, adding 8 rebounds and a Milwaukee Bucks franchise-record 24 assists against the Chicago Bulls in a 151-135 home loss.[8] His double-double performance was also the first "20-20" with points and assists in Bucks history.[8] The following night he topped his career-high with 25 points, in a 110-101 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves.[9] Sessions would later top his career high again by almost doubling it: on February 7, 2009, in an overtime loss against the Detroit Pistons, he scored 44 points.[10] On April 1, 2009, Sessions recorded his first career triple-double against the Los Angeles Lakers scoring 16 points with 16 assists and 10 rebounds.[11]
TGW wrote:As down as I am on Grunfeld, there is no way in hell the Bobcats are remotely close to being on the same level as the Wizards. The Wizards are better at every position, except for maybe small forward.
CCJ, I have no problem taking your money if your up to it.
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:I bet the Bobcats will be about as good as the Wizards this season. I also would wager that when Rich Cho invests money next season, he will get better veterans than Okafor or Ariza; AND he will also land a marquee player that is better than Nene.
Paul is from NC. MJ is the owner. You guys watch and see Micheal Jordan turn that team around way quicker the Ernie and Ted. Their sights are squarely on the bottom line and peak around mediocre.
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:TGW wrote:As down as I am on Grunfeld, there is no way in hell the Bobcats are remotely close to being on the same level as the Wizards. The Wizards are better at every position, except for maybe small forward.
CCJ, I have no problem taking your money if your up to it.
TGW, hold that thought and lets discuss this around training camp time. I'm thinking some kind of fair exchange via mail or gift certificate.![]()
When you say remotely close, do you think within 5 wins is close?
Some random troll wrote:Not to sound negative, but this team is owned by an arrogant cheapskate, managed by a moron and coached by an idiot. Recipe for disaster.
verbal8 wrote:Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:I bet the Bobcats will be about as good as the Wizards this season. I also would wager that when Rich Cho invests money next season, he will get better veterans than Okafor or Ariza; AND he will also land a marquee player that is better than Nene.
Paul is from NC. MJ is the owner. You guys watch and see Micheal Jordan turn that team around way quicker the Ernie and Ted. Their sights are squarely on the bottom line and peak around mediocre.
I think you are overly optimistic about the Bobcats in the short-term. However in the long-term I think they may finally be headed in the right direction. MJ as the "face of the franchise" and Cho as GM. I don't think Dunlap is the long term answer at coach, but his success at the college level indicates he could help develop young talent.
http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball- ... --nba.html
nate33 wrote:I'm still pissed that Charlotte managed to get a 1st round pick in exchange for taking on Gordon, and we got squat for taking on Okafor.
closg00 wrote:nate33 wrote:I'm still pissed that Charlotte managed to get a 1st round pick in exchange for taking on Gordon, and we got squat for taking on Okafor.
And I thought I had problems letting go, but our anger is justified.
We are also due for some major heartburn watching several 2nd round/undrafted draft-steals on other teams instead of the Wizards.
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:rockymac52 wrote:CCJ, I gotta say, you're delusional on this one. It's one thing if you want to be down on the Wizards' chances this season. But it's a whole another story if you want to talk about the Bobcats having some success. Or them landing a big time free agent (bigger than Nene).
I'm a big Rich Cho fan, and I think eventually he'll find a way to make the Bobcats respectable again, but it's not happening this year.
Not …. the first time I've been called delusional, rocky.![]()
Honestly, I'm not down on the Wizards. They have a pretty good shot at the playoffs. It is more that I am a lot more optimistic about the Bobcats than pretty much everyone else. Occasionally, I get this feeling and it comes through. I'm talking about the Bobcats having a heap of success.
CCJ, the first time I called you delusional you was spouting off some ridiculous nonsense about a guy drafted in the 2nd round (Carlos Boozer) being better than a recent #1 pick in the draft (Kwame Brown). I may have also called you an idiot too, lol.
But your not delusional on the Bobcats. And I think everyone is sleeping on MKG big time, he's going to be a legit stud, I'm still disappointed we couldn't find a way to get him. He'll be an elite slasher, defender and finisher from day #1.
When I look at the careers of Emeka Okafor, Trevor Ariza, and Ramon Sessions; I think Sessions is probably the most likely to have a huge bump in production. You say the Wizards are better at every position, but let's start at PG. Sessions has a chance to put up extremes in career numbers again because he will get shots, minutes, and the starting nod. This wasn't the case when he played behind #6 pick Jonny Flynn, or #1 pick Kyrie Irving, or when he was the 4th option behind Kobe, Pau, and Andrew Bynum. Here's what happened when Sessions was the man.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramon_SessionsOn April 14, 2008, Sessions scored a then career-high 20 points, adding 8 rebounds and a Milwaukee Bucks franchise-record 24 assists against the Chicago Bulls in a 151-135 home loss.[8] His double-double performance was also the first "20-20" with points and assists in Bucks history.[8] The following night he topped his career-high with 25 points, in a 110-101 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves.[9] Sessions would later top his career high again by almost doubling it: on February 7, 2009, in an overtime loss against the Detroit Pistons, he scored 44 points.[10] On April 1, 2009, Sessions recorded his first career triple-double against the Los Angeles Lakers scoring 16 points with 16 assists and 10 rebounds.[11]
Wall's better, but if you look at career PER, career WS/48, career high points, career high assists--Sessions has him beat.
Move to SG and the Bobcats addressed a major weakness, three point shooting, when they added Ben Gordon. It's one thing to project how good Beal may become, but I know Ben Gordon's2011-2012 split numbers.
Ben Gordon had a MONTH where he hit over 50% from three. He ended the season hitting 48%FG and 46% 3PT. He's maybe the best three point shooter in the league, way better than Webster, Ariza, Crawford, and probably Beal. I saw a game where Gordon hit 9 straight threes. I think he's going to help another UConn grad, Kemba Walker, a ton. He's going to also help Gerald Henderson when teams want to collapse on him. On top of that, Gordon didn't have anyone passing him the ball at Detroit. Not Rodney Stuckey, or Rip Hamilton, or Brandon Knight. Now he's got a great assist guard, Ramon Sessions. rockymac52, I think the Bobcats backcourt will compete with the Wizards. Wall can't stop Sessions, and Gordon's going to be wide open much of the time.
At SF, you say the Wizards are better. I don't think so. MKG as a rookie will be better than ALL of the Wizards SFs. Reggie Williams under a new coach and healthy can do something better than Wizards SF: Score the ball. He hits threes at a high clip, too. Jeff Taylor out of Vandy might contribute. They've also got Gerald Henderson to fill at SF. I don't see Trevor Ariza, Chris Singleton, and Martell Webster outclassing the Bobcats at SF.
At PF the Wizards have an advantage for sure, if you count Nene/Booker/Vesely/Seraphin as all possible PFs. Center looks to have the same names. I give the Wizards an advantage up front, but with a caveat:
Brendan Haywood might have been a corpse in Dallas and he's in decline, but I know he can defend. He allows Bismack Biyombo to play PF. That young guy is a shotblocking phenom who played Dwight Howard straight up better than anyone (Trevor Booker played him well too, once). I think having Haywood with legit size will shore up a major weakness. Brendan is a Tar Heel who is going home and he will play his best basketball in years. I also expect to see Byron Mullens at PF at times. Mullens can score about like Seraphin. He just can't defend and he's not a true C. I haven't mentioned Tyrus Thomas but I will say under Coach Dunlap you just don't know. Thomas is a freak athlete who played meaningful playoff minutes in 2009-2010.
rocky, I think Charlotte is going to shock (almost) everyone next season. The reason I pump them up is their owner got cheap vets to boost and build around his young players. MJ/Cho brought in a PG from SC and a C from NC. Their G trade brought a first and a UCONN guy to mentor a UCONN guy. They drafted a player who IMO is flat better than Brad Beal. MKG is the real deal. And they have a new coach who has as good a resume as Wittman.
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:rocky, they are radically different, not the same players at all this season.
New coach. New, veteran PG. New, veteran C. Those are the key positions. They drafted a transcendent talent who has a motor and will to win that are very rare. MKG is from an NCAA champion. His rebounding will be beyond elite at SF. He is going to score a lot, too. The strength of hs game will be his Pippen-esque defense. Charlotte brought in a terrific shooter who is also from an NCAA championship program. He is going to mentor Kemba Walker, who will improve--and Walker was a champion in the NCAAs as well as Final Four MVP. He's only in his second year. Biyombo will improve. This coach has a great reputation. This isn't those Bobcat teams of the past. Not at all.
rocky, many "experts" spew out the same old group speak and 95% of them haven't looked at this like I have. I know the Bobcats are going to be way better. I think they very well could have as good a record as this Wizards team.
Folks didn't trust me when I said Wall would struggle and Cousins would be a future star. They didn't trust me when I said I would trade Wall for Irving's rights and a future pick. I'm not always right, but to me the Bobcats look like a very safe bet to be near as good as this Wizards team.
rockymac52 wrote:Overall, they're clearly a better group than they were last year. But as a whole, there's really no one that stands out to me. MKG COULD be that guy. Especially if he can play offense well from the get-go. I just don't see that happening (the offense, that is). This team is dysfunctional, and they're a lock for bottom 5 in the league.
rockymac52 wrote:Brendan Haywood is the man. Always has been. Back in the day I was infuriated every time we went with Etan Thomas instead of him, or when my friends would argue that Haywood's garbage and/or that Thomas was good. I'm well aware of what Haywood brings to a team.
nate33 wrote:I agree with every word of rockymac's analysis.
The Bobcats will stink. Rookies never make an impact, particularly rookies who played just one year in college. MKG may turn out to be a stud, but it's not going to happen this year. Ben Gordan and Brendan Haywood were quality role players a few years ago, but neither have had a good season in a while. It's hard for me to believe they will break out on the Bobcats. Walker and Biyombo were not impressive at all as rookies. There's no reason to believe that they will be anything more than mediocre role players in this league.
I think CCJ's analysis is tainted by his odd fascination with Ramon Sessions. Sessions has a history of putting up good numbers for bad teams. I expect that to continue. I suppose it can be argued that Sessions has been the victim of bad timing, having been replaced by Kyrie Irving and then Steve Nash, but I still think that if he is as good as CCJ believes, he would have found a home on a good team by now.
Nivek wrote:Keep in mind that the Charlotte could make HUGE improvements from last season and still be one of the worst teams in league history. Last season, they had the worst winning percentage in league history. If they literally doubled that -- from .106 to .212 they'd still have the 42nd worst winning percentage in league history. They'd be a 17-18 win team.
It really can't be overstated just how bad Charlotte was last year.
Some measures from last season:
- 30th in scoring differential -- 2nd worst in league history.
- 30th in offensive rating -- 9th worst in league history.
- 30th in defensive rating -- one of the 100 worst defenses in league history.
They were 30th in shooting with an efg of just .439. To put this in perspective, league average was .487. Cleveland was 29th -- the Cavs shot .463. Usually bad shooting teams do decently on the offensive boards -- not Charlotte. They were one of the league's worst offensive rebounding teams last season.
On defense, they were lousy at forcing misses and bad at getting defensive rebounds. They also didn't force turnovers.
According to PER, not a single Charlotte player rated above average last season. Their highest ranked player was Kemba Walker with a 14.9 -- average is 15.0. Of course, PER rewards players like Walker who shoot a lot, even if their shooting is inefficient. In my system (which properly values shooting efficiency), Derrick Brown rated right at average. Everyone else was well below average, including Walker. And it looks like they're not even bringing Brown back.
When I look at the guys they brought in, I don't see them getting in the vicinity of .500. I think it would take a miracle for them to get to 30 wins.
Here's how their acquisitions rate in my system:
- Sessions -- average
- Haywood -- average, and at a point where he's likely to decline
- Ben Gordon -- replacement level last season
As for the rookies, MKG will probably be good, but nate's correct that he's likely not to be great right away. Jeff Taylor is a nice value pick where they got him, and might make a solid pro. But he's not going to change the franchise's fortunes either.
I don't see how they go from being an 8-9 win team (over an 82-game schedule) to 35-40 wins. If they can get to 20 wins, I'd call that a successful season for the Bobcats.